Watonwan, Blue Earth, and Le Sueur River Watersheds

Watonwan, Blue Earth, and Le Sueur River Watersheds

Minnesota River Basin Watonwan, Blue Earth, and Le Sueur River Watersheds • Physiography and Description • Geology and Land Use • Climate • Water Quality o Ground Water o Surface Water • Recreation • References Among the earliest French adventurers in Minnesota was Pierre Charles Le Sueur, fur trader and explorer along the upper Mississippi in the late 1600’s. From a smaller, more western river, Le Sueur had obtained a sample of strange, bluish-green clay, and he took the clay to France, so the story goes, where a king’s officer, one Le Huillier, assayed it and concluded that it contained copper. Consequently in 1700 Le Sueur came back to the wilderness with an expedition fully prepared to ascend the Rivière St. Pierre and a southern tributary they named the Rivière Verte (Green River) to establish a copper mine. Arriving in the fall, they quickly built Fort l’Huillier, named for the legendary assayer, and wintered on the stream we now call the Blue Earth River, about five miles from its mouth. Mining operations ensued the following spring. It turned out the clay contained no copper, and today, neither the remains of the clay beds or fort can be found along the river (T. Waters, 1977). Physiography And Description In an effort to divide the Minnesota River Basin into manageable geographic units, the Minnesota River Basin is often subdivided into thirteen major watersheds, the boundaries of which are delineated by drainage. The Watonwan and Le Sueur River Watersheds, though technically subwatersheds of the Blue Earth River (the Watonwan and Le Sueur are tributaries to the Blue Earth River) are considered major watersheds under this classification scheme. However, historical monitoring and current ongoing assessment and implementation activities within this section of the Minnesota River Basin treat the Watonwan and Le Sueur River Watersheds as subwatersheds of the Blue Earth River. Staying within the context of these activities, this document is written in the format of the latter classification structure. The Blue Earth River Watershed is located in the south central Minnesota Counties of Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Faribault, Freeborn, Jackson, Le Sueur, Martin, Steele, Waseca, and Watonwan and in the north central Iowa counties of Emmet, Kossuth, and Winnebago. The drainage network of the Blue Earth River Watershed includes the main stem of Blue Earth River, flowing to the north, it’s two main tributaries, the Watonwan River flowing from the southwest and the Le Sueur River flowing from the southeast, and thirty one smaller tributaries. The Watonwan and Le Sueur Rivers join the Blue Earth just above its confluence with the Minnesota River at Mankato. The headwaters of the Blue Earth rise in Iowa and flow north across the state boundary as the West Fork and the main stem; both are small and ditched. The East Fork, a larger stream, originates entirely in Minnesota. The Blue Earth River accounts for 46% of the flow of the Minnesota River at Mankato and has a total drainage area of 3,486 square miles, 3,135 of which are in Minnesota (including 831 square miles within the Watonwan River Subwatershed and 1,089 square miles within the Le Sueur River Subwatershed) and 351 in Iowa. The Blue Earth and its two major tributaries make up a wide, fan shaped watershed that is unique in Minnesota because it is broader than it is long. Each major tributary is almost as large as the Blue Earth itself, so that the watershed is composed of three major stream systems. Major streams have eroded channels 40 to 75 feet deep in headwater regions and 150 to 200 feet deep near the mouth of the Blue Earth River at Mankato. The watershed is extensively drained through both public and private ditch and tile systems. There are 314 public (county and judicial) ditch systems within the watershed. Historical records state that prior to regional settlement and widespread agricultural development "The Big Woods," a large tract of virgin hardwoods that covered much of east- central Minnesota, extended into the northern part of the Blue Earth drainage. To the south were flat plains with natural grassland. Into these plains the streams cut deep ravines, and along the steep riverbank hillsides, extended fingers of the Big Woods from the north. "The Big Woods" area is situated in the North Central Hardwood Forests Ecoregion while the plains region falls within the Western Corn Belt Plains Ecoregion. Overall, geomorphology of the Blue Earth River Watershed can be described as nearly level to gently rolling surficial till deposits with almost imperceptible slopes. The surface relief descends from three directions, converging from the east, west, and south toward the central portion of the watershed. The western half of the watershed lies primarily within the Blue Earth Till Plain. Landscapes within this till plain are characterized as being a complex mixture of gently sloping (2-6%) well drained loamy soils and nearly level (0-2%) poorly drained loamy soils. Artificial drainage to remove ponded water from flat and depressional areas is extensive. Water erosion potential is moderate on much of lands (46%) within this geomorphic setting. Geomorphology of the eastern half of the watershed is a complex mixture of glacial lake plains, till plains, and moraines. Sections of the "glacial" Minnesota Lake Plain are located in the eastern half of the Blue Earth River Watershed (within the western half of the Le Sueur River Subwatershed and the southeastern corner of the Watonwan River subwatershed). Landscapes within the lake plain are characterized as nearly level with poorly drained or very poorly-drained clayey or silty clay soils. Subsurface and surface tiling are extensively used in this region of the watershed, but internal drainage remains poor. The majority of lands within this geomorphic setting are not bordered by streams, lakes or drainage ditches. Roughly 58% of these lands have a low water erosion potential. Table 4.32: Historical Flows of the Blue Earth River and Its Major Tributaries Drainage Area Annual April through July through River (acres) Flow (cfs) June Flow (cfs) August Flow (cfs) Watonwan 541,826 336 655 239 Blue 774,115 606 1314 481 Earth Le Sueur 705,216 476 993 361 The western, southern and eastern boundaries of the watershed are end moraines formed by Pleistocene glaciers. Various ground moraines are also contained in the eastern half of the watershed. In general, theses morainal complexes exhibit a undulating to hilly landscape with slopes ranging from 2-12%. Approximately one fourth of these lands are adjacent to streams and ditches, thus creating a moderate potential for sediment delivery to streams. Soils are predominantly loamy in texture. The majority of agricultural lands within the watershed's morainal complexes are moderately steep and well drained, although, approximately 25% of these tilled lands are nearly level, poorly drained, requiring tile drainage. Fifty percent of the cropped lands within this geomorphic setting have a high potential for water erosion. Geology And Land Use The oldest and deepest rocks of the Blue Earth River Watershed are Precambrian in age. Found primarily in the western third of the watershed, these hard, relatively impermeable, crystalline rocks are of igneous and metamorphic origins. Overlying the Precambrian rocks to the west and comprising the primary bedrock in a west to east gradient through the remaining two thirds of the watershed are Cambrian and then Ordovician sedimentary rocks. Pleistocene glacial deposits cover almost the entire watershed and are predominantly till, an unstratified mixture of clay, silt, sand, and gravel. Within the center of the watershed, a flat- lying, thin clay deposit is present on top of the till, a remnant lake bed of "glacial" Lake Minnesota. Buried bedrock valleys also exist throughout the watershed, reflecting preglacial drainage patterns. These valleys were later filled by glacial deposits during subsequent glacial advances. Land use within the Blue Earth River Watershed is primarily agricultural, accounting for approximately 84% of the available acres. Two-year corn/soybean rotations comprise approximately 92% of cropped lands within the watershed; small grains, hay, and grasslands enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) make up the majority of the balance. Early 1996 estimates were that 2.5% of watershed’s agricultural acres were enrolled in the CRP program, a voluntary federal program that offers annual rental payments to farmers in exchange for planting areas of grass and trees on lands subject to erosion. The majority of the crop lands within the watershed are classified as highly productive and are considered to be among the finest agricultural lands within the United States. 1996 figures estimated there are roughly one million cattle and three million hogs in the Minnesota River Basin, of which, approximately 30 percent of the cattle and 50 percent of the hogs are raised within the southeastern section of the basin (which includes the Blue Earth River Watershed). Climate The climate within the Blue Earth River Watershed is continental, with cold dry winters and warm wet summers. Climatic records from St. James, Minnesota have shown temperatures over the last thirty years to have ranged from a low of -300 F in January of 1970 to a high of 1050 F in July of 1988. Average monthly temperatures from the same site have ranged from 140 F in January to 730 F in July over this same time period. Annual precipitation rates within the watershed average between twenty seven to thirty inches and average annual runoff is estimated to be between four to five and one half inches. Figures show that on an annual basis the Blue Earth River Watershed receives more precipitation and delivers the greatest runoff of all the major watersheds within the Minnesota River Basin.

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